What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
What is jolly unfair, of course, is that China has far lower labour costs than America and so is able to flood the market with cheap goods, much to the appreciation of American consumers. That America should suddenly be enjoying such a rush of cheap goodies from the Far East is largely down to China’s accession to the World Trade Organisation in December 2001. In return for access to America’s markets, China has sharply reduced its tariffs and lifted bans on American food imports. While China still has some way to go on free trade, in particular on the elimination of commercial piracy, the US can hardly complain that its markets are being exploited, when it, too, continues to cling to trade barriers. American farmers are still being richly subsidised and the US has retained the right to apply its heavily biased ‘anti-dumping’ laws for another 15 years.
That the Bush administration should threaten China after just two years of free-ish trade with the country is a disgraceful piece of pandering to industrial workers in swing states. Not only is the US government in danger of cheating its own consumers and investors, the latter of whom are repatriating much of the wealth generated in the current Chinese boom; it is failing to recognise that with the US economy suddenly growing at a rate of 7 per cent per annum, it is only the falling prices of Chinese-made goods which are preventing a return to rampant inflation.
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